lilacs, which came up in a bower around the open window, I saw Tina alighting from a carriage.
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"O Aunty," I said involuntarily, "it is she. She is coming, poor child."
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We heard a light fluttering motion and a footfall on the stairs, and the door opened, and in a moment Tina stood among us.
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She was very pale, and there was an expression such as I never saw in her face before. There had been a shock which had driven her soul inward, from the earthly upon the spiritual and the immortal. Something deep and pathetic spoke in her eyes, as she looked around on each of us for a moment without speaking. As she met Miss Mehitable's haggard, careworn face, her lip quivered. She ran to her, threw her arms round her, and hid her face on her shoulder, and sobbed out, "O Aunty, Aunty! I did n't think I should live to make you this trouble."
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"You, darling!" said Miss Mehitable. "It is not you who have made it."
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"I am the cause," she said. "I know that he has done dreadfully wrong. I cannot defend him, but oh! I love him still. I cannot help loving him; it is my duty to," she added. "I promised, you know, before God, 'for better, for worse'; and what I promised I must keep. I am his wife; there is no going back from that."
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"I know it, darling," said Miss Mehitable, stroking her head. "You are right, and my love for you will never change."
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"I am come," she said, "to see what can be done."
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"N OTHING can be done! " spoke out the deep voice of Jonathan Rossiter. "She is lost and we disgraced beyond remedy!"
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"You must not say that," Tina said, raising her head, her eyes sparkling through her tears with some of her old vivacity. "Your sister is a noble, injured woman. We must shield her and save her; there is every excuse for her."
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"There is NEVER any excuse for such conduct," said Mr. Rossiter, harshly.
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Tina started up in her headlong, energetic fashion. "What right have you to talk so, if you call yourself a Christian?" she said. "Think a minute. W HO was it said, 'Neither do I con-
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